slim cessna's auto club The Commandments According to SCAC (180g vinyl LP, £18.95)

label: glitterhouse

It has been twenty-four years since Slim
Cessna parted ways with The Denver Gentlemen (in which a young David Eugene Edwards was seen and heard for the first time), that grand progenitor of the
peculiar strain of Gothic Americana unique to the Mile High City, to form Slim Cessna's Auto Club with a group of talented peers.
Many bands with a long and successful run like that would stick close to its roots. But rather than rest on well-earned laurels, the Auto Club challenged itself to
break with well-worn modes of operating for the new record. Wallace Stenger may have captured the spirit of the west in his 1971 novel Angle of Repose. Jim
Thompson surely exposed the lurid underbelly of the Western experience. Cormac McCarthy definitely evoked the conflicted, tortured spirit of small town life
on the frontier. William Faulkner and Flannery O'Connor informed all of them with a humour and soulfulness. It is that literary tradition that imbues the harrowing
and celebratory sound and riveting stories of Slim Cessna's Auto Club. And for a full twenty years it was largely in that realm of art that the Auto Club
revealed and garnered a loyal cult following well beyond the boundaries of the Queen City of the Plains.
The title evokes the themes of cosmic punishment and redemption that have served the band's songwriting engine so well in the past. But this set of songs
sounds more hopeful and expansive, a quality that was always there but this time out the brighter sides of the songwriting are emphasised. Hints of
this saw early full-flown expression on 2008's "Cipher" and "Unentitled" from 2011.
With The Commandments, however, the Auto Club seems to step forward into the promise of its own possibilities. It remains capable of the heady darkness
and celebratory intensity with which it made its name. Now that charmingly dusky and spare sound breathes with a colour and delicacy of feeling that perhaps
sat in the background in times past. Maybe it's partly due to the greater creative contributions from longtime collaborator Rebecca Vera and The Peeler or the
inclusion of upright bass player Ian O'Dougherty. But the core of the band's songwriting and sound is anchored firmly in the vision of Slim, Munly Munly and
Lord Dwight Pentacost. Whatever the true source of this transformation, "The Commandments According to SCAC" sounds like a band marshalling its creative
inspiration to mark out a new chapter of its existence. When you get to see the Auto Club tour following the album's release, you'll get to see an already mighty
band reinvigorated by this new spirit as well as by the fire that has long burned in its collective belly. Vinyl plus Download Code.